|
|
|
Global indignation over Saudi development plans
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
|
|
|
|
IANS | 27 Feb, 2023
Saudi Arabia has announced plans to build a large cube-shaped structure
as part of a re-development project in the capital, Riyadh, triggering
angry reactions from Muslims on social media, saying it resembles the
Kaaba.
Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
(MbS) announced the launch of the New Murabba Development Company, last
week. The new company will oversee developing a new downtown area spread
over 19 sq.km in capital Riyadh
Authorities claim that plans
have been created keeping sustainability and environment in mind. The
project would include green spaces, walking and cycling pathways, to
improve the quality of life by encouraging active, healthy lives and
social interaction.
What is Mukaab?
The main feature of
the project has been named the Mukaab, a gigantic cube structure has
been described as the future 'face of the city', and critics say it may
even be the face of a new Saudi Arabia, focussing and generating more
revenue through tourism than petroleum. At present, the plan is to fill
the cube with 100,000 residential units as well as 9,000 hotel rooms.
In
addition, it will also have over 80 entertainment and cultural venues. A
renowned museum, and a campus for a technology and design university.
The 19 km space will accommodate thousands of people. The 25 million
sq.mt. floor area is divided strategically into 104,000 residential
units, 9,000 hotel rooms & 620,000 sq.mt. of leisure assets.
Additional 980,000 sq.mts. will be covered by retail and 1.8 million
sq.mt. will be dedicated to recreational facilities.
The
building, will be 20 times bigger than the New York City's Empire State
Building, and will be a one-stop location for shoppers and business
owners, with more than 980,000 square metres of retail shops and 1.4
million square metres of office space.
The Mukaab's core
structure will be an atrium, allowing for tons of natural light and
foliage to thrive inside. The government brief promises an immersive
'gateway into another world' that is completely powered by the latest
digital, virtual, and holographic technologies.
In recent years,
Saudi Arabia's abundance of oil money has sparked the design of some
absolutely insane architectural projects. In 2021, MbS announced his
$500 billion futuristic Neom city in the northwest of the country, with
promises of robot maids, flying taxis, and a giant artificial moon. And
last year, he unveiled a giant linear city, The Line, which aims to
stretch over 106 miles and house 9 million people. The
one-trillion-dollar project will essentially be its own massive city in
the middle of a desert once it's finished.
A new Kaaba?
Authorities
claim that the project will add 180 billion riyals ($48 bn) to the
Saudi economy and "create 334,000 direct and indirect jobs", though the
cost of the gargantuan project has not been mentioned.
New
Murabba (square) and the Mukaab were widely ridiculed by social media
users, both within and outside Saudi Arabia, apart from a large number
of Muslims all across the globe, as soon as the plans were announced.
The
Mukaab was also denounced for its likeness to the most important
cube-like structure in Saudi Arabia and the Islamic world: the Kaaba.
During namaaz, Muslims around the world face towards the structure in
the centre of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, and circumambulate it during
Haj and Umrah pilgrimages.
Though one would have expected a much
more vociferous outcry from the clerics in Saudi Arabia, but it has not
happened as they can't unyoke clutches of the ruling dispensation and
have lost free voice and expression.
In India, the All India Shia Personal Law Board has condemned the project.
In
a statement, general secretary of the Board Maulana Yasoob Abbas said
the Saudi government was deeply hurting the religious sentiments of
Muslims across the globe by building a structure that resembles the
Kabaa which is the holiest sites of Islam. Maulana Abbas said a massive
movement would be launched to oppose this project. The first protest
will be held at the Imambara in Lucknow on March 5.
Why this new developmental push?
Apparently
it seems that Saudi Arabia, has embarked on an ambitious project to
diversify the economy away from oil and shed its image as a
conservative, closed-off state. Besides promoting new narratives of
development and progress.
Additionally, it has serious regional
competition from neighbouring Dubai and the Qatari capital Doha, both of
which have for decades tried to position themselves as regional tourism
and investment hubs.
The kingdom already has an $800 billion
plan to double the size of the capital in the next decade, as well as
transform it into a cultural and economic hub for the region, according
to Saudi media.
Over the years Saudi Arabia, which has seen an
economic boom and a desert country transformed into a modern developing
country was essentially based on the petroleum industry.
In
addition it earns billions in revenues through the Umrah and Haj
pilgrimages. In recent years, it has made travel to the kingdom
friendlier for the pilgrims and expansion plans in the two holy cities
of Mecca and Madinah are underway to accommodate more number of
tourists.
As a strategy it also is promoting the Umrah pilgrimage
more than the annual Haj, as the revenues through Umrah pilgrims flows
throughout the year and the government is not forced to spend more on
providing facilities and security to the Umrah pilgrims, whose stay is
much shorter as compared to the Haj pilgrims.
So far, the government was focussing more on promoting tourism, but with the ascension of MbS, it seems to have changed tracks.
As his critics say he is pursuing a growth plan which seems more 'unIslamic' than his parleys with the Israelis.
(Asad Mirza is a political commentator based in New Delhi.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
|
|
Daily Poll |
|
|
Will the new MSME credit assessment model simplify financing? |
|
|
|
|
|
Commented Stories |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|